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(19/20) Farewell to Fairacre




  Farewell to Fairacre

  A NOVEL IN THE BELOVED FAIRACRE SERIES

  Miss Read

  * * *

  Illustrated by J. S. Goodall

  * * *

  HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY

  Boston New York

  * * *

  First Houghton Mifflin paperback edition 2001

  Copyright © 1993 by Miss Read

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from

  this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Company,

  215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  Visit our Web site: www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Read, Miss.

  Farewell to Fairacre / Miss Read;

  illustrations by John S. Goodall.

  p. cm.

  978-0-618-15456-2 (pbk)

  1. Fairacre (England: Imaginary place)—Fiction. 2. School

  principals—England—Fiction. 3. Country life—England

  —Fiction. 4. Villages—England—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6069.A42F33 1994

  823'.914 94-25628

  CIP

  Printed in the United States of America

  DOH 10 9 8 7 6 5

  * * *

  To Eileen and Mike

  with love

  * * *

  "If you've ever enjoyed a visit to Mitford, you will relish a visit to Fairacre."

  —Jan Karon

  PART ONE

  CHRISTMAS TERM

  CHAPTER 1

  Term Begins

  The first day of term has a flavour that is all its own.

  For one thing, it invariably dawns fair and bright, no matter how appalling the weather has been in the days preceding it.

  In fact, the last two weeks of the school summer holidays had been cold and rainy, washing out any plans for picnics or gardening which I had made. As headmistress of the neighbouring village school of Fairacre, I had hoped to spend the last weeks of my summer break in tidying the garden before the autumn leaves swamped the place. Now such plans had been thwarted, for I must return to my school duties.

  On this particular September morning, the view from my kitchen window was bathed in sunlight. Dew sparkled on the lawn where a thrush hastened hither and thither with an ear alert for worms below. Spiders' webs decorated the hawthorn hedge with medallions of silver lace, and the branches of the old Bramley apple tree were bowed down with fruit.

  Beyond this spread Hundred Acre field dotted with sheep, and farther still the misty bulk of the downs against the sky.

  I was lucky to live in this pretty downland village of Beech Green. Luckier still to live in the cottage which was now my home, for it had been left to me on the death of a dear friend and colleague, Dolly Clare.

  She had lived there for most of her long life, arriving at the age of six with her sister Ada, and her parents Francis and Mary Clare. It was Francis who had rethatched the cottage, and some of his tools had been used, years later, by a young thatcher who inherited them.

  When Dolly told me, in the last years of her life, that she had left the cottage to me, I was overwhelmed at such generosity.

  All my working life I had lived either in lodgings or in the tied school house at Fairacre. More prudent teachers had invested in property, as I should have done, but somehow I had never got round to taking out a mortgage, and the years slipped by as I enjoyed my rent-free time as headmistress of Fairacre school.

  But a few years earlier, my former assistant and dear friend had left me this lovely home, and I have never ceased to be grateful.

  The village of Beech Green is some two or three miles from Fairacre, and Dolly Clare had cycled there and back each school day for many years. I was luckier and had a car to shelter me on my daily journey. We get plenty of blustery winds in this open area, and Dolly must have had many rough journeys in her time, but I never knew her to be late for school, and she always looked immaculate in the classroom, no matter how severely the elements had battered her on the way there.

  The kitchen clock said eight o'clock. It was time I tore myself away from all the delights before me, and set off for a new term.

  Tibby, my fastidious cat, oozed through the cat-flap and surveyed my offering of the most expensive cat food on the market with considerable distaste, before walking away, and I made my way to the garage.

  The morning air smelt as seductive as the flowers which scented it.

  It was sad to have to leave the garden, but there was no help for it.

  Term had begun, and I must be on my way.

  At first sight, Fairacre school looked much as it did a hundred years ago. A low one-storey building with Gothic windows and porch, it did its Victorian best to imitate St Patrick's venerable pile near by.

  The playground was dappled with sunshine and the shadows of lofty trees in the vicarage garden next door. In one corner stood the pile of coke which would soon be needed for the two tortoise stoves inside.

  A few children were already rushing about in the playground, and one or two of the most effusive galloped up to throw their arms round my waist in exuberant greeting. Such affection would be somewhat muted, I knew, as the term progressed and we all settled down to our usual workaday relationship, but it was very cheering to be greeted as if risen from the dead, and I was glad to see them in such good spirits.

  My curmudgeonly school cleaner, Mrs Pringle, was not quite so welcoming.

  'That skylight,' she told me dourly, 'has been up to its old tricks again.'

  I thought that Mrs Pringle was also up to her old tricks, damping any enthusiasm she encountered on this bright new morning. The skylight was an enemy, of many years standing, to us both.

  'Anything special?'

  'All this 'ere rain has done its worst,' she informed me with satisfaction. 'Dripped all over your ink stand, run under the map cupboard, and nearly got to my stoves.'

  Here her voice rose in a crescendo and her jowls grew red and wobbled like a turkey-cock's. The two tortoise stoves at our school are the idols of Mrs Pringle's life, and she ministers to them with love and blacklead and all the considerable power of her elbow.

  'I'll get Bob Willet to have a look,' I promised her.

  Bob Willet is our school caretaker, sexton and gravedigger at St Patrick's church, and general handyman to whoever is in need of his services in Fairacre.

  He is an expert gardener, a steady church-goer and a good friend to all. Our village, without Bob, would lose its heart.

  But Mrs Pringle was not to be placated so easily.

  'I can't be everywhere at once. I come up here twice a week regular all through the holidays, and there's not many school cleaners as can say the same. I've worked my fingers to the bone for all these years, as well you know, and for what thanks?'

  I looked at Mrs Pringle's fingers which were nowhere near the bone, but rather resembled prime pork sausages.

  'Well, I thank you. Often.'

  'But do those dratted kids?'

  At this point a posse of the dratted kids appeared in the doorway, beaming broadly.

  'It's bell time, miss. John Todd says it's his turn, but he done it last morning of term.'

  'Did it,' I corrected automatically. Not that it would make the slightest difference, but once a teacher always a teacher.

  'Anyway,' I added, 'it's a new start today, so Eileen may ring the bell.'

  Term had undoubtedly begun.

  Ever since I arrived at Fairacre some years ago, we have had the threat of closure hanging over our heads.

  It is a two-teacher school and seems to have been so for most of it
s long life. When I came, the numbers were between thirty and forty on roll, but early log books show that occasionally the school numbered around a hundred pupils.

  In those days families were large. It was nothing to have four or five children from the same family under the school roof at the same time. Also, of course, children stayed until the age of fourteen, but in these rural areas it was not uncommon for them to leave at twelve if they had been offered a post. Most of the boys went into farming, and most of the girls into service.

  During my time, my schoolchildren ranged in age from five to eleven years, and after that they proceeded to George Annett's care in the school at Beech Green where they stayed until fifteen.

  The plight of our falling numbers over the years was a constant headache, and only a year or two earlier they had fallen to about twenty. My assistant teacher, Mrs Richards, who taught the infants, and I thought that the outlook was gloomy.

  But amazingly help was at hand. Two new houses in the village were bought by a charitable housing trust, part of the Malory-Hope foundation, the brain-child of a much-loved local philanthropist. One house was already occupied. Here a married couple in their forties were in charge of four children, the youngest five years of age and the eldest ten. All four had been at Fairacre school now for one term, and were welcomed by Mrs Richards and me, as well as all those who had the welfare of our school at heart.

  The other house was awaiting five children, but one would be a baby. Nevertheless, the thought of four more children, of school age, to swell our numbers in the near future was decidedly heartening.

  There had been some plumbing problems with the second house which had held up the arrival of the second family, but we all hoped that we should see our new pupils by half term, at the end of October, or certainly by Christmas.

  The Trust had been set up, some years earlier, by a wealthy and philanthropic business man. It began as a housing scheme for the orphans of men who had served in the armed forces, and today it still gave such orphans priority. But as the Trust's work expanded, other children were accepted, and the founder's basic desire for family units was respected. Not more than five, and usually four, children were looked after by a married couple in a small home. They attended the local schools, and took part in general activities, and the regime seemed to work admirably.

  I must admit that when the news broke in Fairacre that two families would be housed in the Trust's latest acquisitions, there were a few misgivings from the older inhabitants. Mrs Pringle, of course, was one of the gloomier forecasters.

  'I've heard tell as some of these kids come from towns.'

  'What's wrong with that?'

  'Remember them evacuees? All town lots they were. And brought no end of trouble. Head lice, fleas, scabious—'

  'Scabies,' I corrected automatically.

  'As I said,' continued Mrs Pringle, undaunted. 'Not to mention bed-wetting and worse.'

  'Well, these aren't evacuees, and are being properly brought up. Frankly, I'm looking forward to them, and so are the children.'

  'You'll regret it,' said my old sparring partner. 'Mark my words.'

  But her dark forebodings had not come to pass. The four new pupils had settled into Fairacre school very well, were accepted by the children with the easy camaraderie of the young and, to my mind, were a very welcome addition to the establishment.

  The golden September weather continued. The children still wore their summer clothes and complained of being 'sweatin' 'ot, miss', but continued to rush around the playground, and occasionally up and over the coke pile when they thought they were unobserved, so they did not get a great deal of sympathy from me when they pleaded exhaustion from the weather conditions.

  But I relished this balmy spell of weather. We had some lessons out of doors, particularly those which involved reading, either by me, or on their own.

  Sometimes I suspected that the combined siren voices of a distant tractor driven by someone's dad, the cawing of the rooks above us in the vicarage trees and the humming of innumerable insects around us took more of the children's attention than the printed pages before them. But this did not perturb me greatly. They would remember those golden moments long after the stories had faded from their memory.

  Sometimes I took my class for a nature walk. This was always exhilarating, particularly when we traversed the village street on our way to the chalky paths of the downs. A mother, on her way to see Mr Lamb at the Post Office, would greet us warmly. A distant tractor would be pointed out enthusiastically.

  'My dad's over there. They're havin' swedes in that field this year.'

  Someone would wave from an upstairs window.

  'My gran,' said Ernest, waving back. 'She has a nap on her bed after dinner.'

  Such encounters were very cheering, but I could not help noticing that there were far fewer people about in the village than when I first came to Fairacre years ago.

  Now it was the norm for both parents to go to work, and nowadays at a distance, travelling by car. Certainly, both parents had worked in earlier times, but usually within walking distance of their houses.

  Mr Roberts, our local farmer, probably employed eight or ten men when I knew him first, and their wives helped at the farm house or at nearby large homes with domestic work. Usually it was part-time work for the wives, for they arranged matters so that they could be at home at midday to dish up a meal for their husbands and any of the family who were at hand. A number of my schoolchildren went home to a midday meal when I first started teaching at Fairacre. Nowadays all stayed to school dinner. It was a sign of the times.

  A few hundred yards beyond the edge of the village, a path led upwards to the downs. The first few yards were shaded by shrubby trees. The wayfaring trees grew here, their oval grey-green leaves encircling the masses of white flowers so soon to turn brown and change into autumn berries. Brambles clutched at legs, their fruits already forming into hard green knobs, and here and there a second flowering of honeysuckle scented the air.

  But as we ascended we left the scrub behind, and found ourselves in the high windy world of true chalk downland.

  We sat puffing on the fine grass and enjoyed the splendid view. There were pellets of rabbit droppings around us among the tiny vetches and thymes of the grassland, and the small blue butterflies which inhabit chalky places fluttered about their business, ignoring intruders.

  We pointed out to each other various points of interest.

  'There's the weathercock,' said Patrick. 'It says the wind's in the east.'

  'Soppy!' commented John Todd. 'You be lookin' at his tail.' An ensuing scrap was quelled by me.

  They noticed washing blowing on a distant line, a train making its way to Caxley station some ten miles away, and a herd of black and white Friesian cows behind Mr Roberts' farm house.

  Was this, I wondered guiltily, really 'A Nature Walk'? Was it, more truthfully, 'An Afternoon's Outing'? Whatever it was, I decided, watching the children at their various activities or non-activities, it was, as Shakespeare said of sleep,

  Balm of hurt minds...

  Chief nourisher in life's feast.

  We picked a few sprigs of downland vegetation and some twigs from the shrubs at the foot of the downs as we returned, as a sop to the Cerberus of education.

  John Todd had collected a pocketful of rabbit droppings which he maintained were going to be used as fertiliser for his mum's pot-plants. My only proviso was that his collection should be put into a paper bag until home time. I heard him later telling another boy that he thought he might sell some to his granny.

  Sometimes I think that John Todd will end up either in jail, or as a millionaire. He will certainly make his mark somewhere.

  I relished returning to my Beech Green home on those golden afternoons of early term time. The gardening jobs which had waited during the rainy holidays were soon done, and Bob Willet came to lend a hand on Saturday mornings when he could spare the time.

  'You heard about Mrs Mawne?'
he asked, as we sat with our mugs of coffee in the sunshine.

  'No. What's happened?'

  'Been took to hospital. Lungs, they say.'

  This was bad news. I liked Mrs Mawne, a strong-minded busy soul who took an active part in Fairacre affairs, and looked after her husband Henry very well. Henry was a well-known ornithologist and naturalist and wrote, not only for our Caxley Chronicle, but also for more erudite publications. At one time, when it was thought he was a bachelor, and before his wife returned to him, Fairacre had been busy arranging what it considered a suitable match between Henry and me. Naturally, neither of us knew anything about these romantic plans, and very cross we were when light dawned.

  'Is it serious?'

  'Must be if she's in hospital,' said Bob, who appeared to regard these institutions as the seemly place to die in. 'She do smoke, of course. Don't do your tubes any good.'

  'And what about Mr Mawne? Can he look after himself?'

  'Shouldn't think so,' said Bob cheerfully. 'Probably frizzle a hegg and bacon.'

  'That's something, anyway.'

  'Not as good as my Alice's steak and kidney pudden, or her rabbit pie with a nice bit of onion in it.'

  'Well, you're spoilt,' I told him.

  'That's right,' he agreed with much satisfaction.

  He drained his mug and went back to his weeding.

  During the next week, Henry Mawne appeared at school.

  This was no surprise, as he is a frequent visitor bringing pamphlets and posters about birds and other natural matters which he thinks will interest the children. They always enjoy his visits, and sometimes he stays for half an hour and gives an impromptu nature lesson.

  On this occasion I thought he looked older and shabbier. I enquired after his wife, and he shook his head sadly.

  'Not too good. The medics tell me she had a slight stroke yesterday. Nothing to worry about, they tell me.' His face grew pink. 'I ask you! Nothing to worry about indeed! They told me not to visit her last night, but I'm damn well going up this afternoon.'